MEDICAL SURVEY OF RONGELAP PEOPLE
EIGHT YEARS AFTER EXPOSURE TO FALLOUT
Introduction

porary village was constructed for the Rongelap

The results of « nedical survey of the people of
Rongclap in the Marshall Islands, carried out in

the south, where they lived for ihe iuliuwing 34%
years and were examined at yearly intervals by a
special medical team. In July 1957, after careful
evaluation of the radioactive contamination situation, Rongelap Island was considered safe for
habitation. A new village was constructed, and the
Rongelap people were moved there by Navy ship.
The annual medical surveys have since been
carricd out on Rongelap Island.
A group of more than 100 Rongelap people,
who were relatives of the exposed people but had
been away from the istand at the time of the accident, moved back with the Rongclap people to
their home island and have served as an ideal
comparison population for the studics. This number has since increased to about 200, Following

March 1962 at 8 years after the accident, are pre-

sented in this report. These people had been acci-

dentally exposed to fallout radiation following a
detonation of a high yield thermonuclear device
during experiments at Bikini in the Pacific Proving

Grounds in March 1954. An unpredicted shift in
winds caused a deposition of significant amounts

of fallout on four inhabited Marshall Islands to
the cast of Bikini (see Figure 1) and also on 23

Japanese fishermen aboard their fishing vessel,
the Lucky Dragon. Of the inhabitants of the island
of Rongelap, 105 nautical miles away from the det-

onation, 64 Yeccived the largest fallout exposure:
an estimated dose of 175 r of whole-body gamma

radiation, contamination of the skin sufficient to

result in beta burns, andslight internal absorption
of radioactive materials through inhalation and

ingestion. Another 18 Rongelap people away on
a nearby island: (Ailingnac), where less fallout
occurred, received only an external gammadose of
about 69 r. There were 28 American servicemen
on the island of Rongerik further to the east who
reccived about the same amountof radiation as
did the Rongelap people on Ailingnae. Lastly, 157
Marshallese on Utirik Island, about 200 miles
further cast, received about an estimated 14 r of
whole-body radiation. The fallout was not visible
on this island and no skin effects developed.
The exposed people were evacuated from these
islands by plane and ship about two days after the

people on Majuro Atoll several hundred miles to

the initial survey of the Utirik people on Kwa-

jalein in 1954, a repeat survey was carried out in

March 1957. In addition, during the past survey,
as in the previous surveys, a visit was made to

Kwajalein and Majuro Atolls for examination of a
number of Rongclap people, now residing at these
atolls, and also groups of children who represent

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150 miles to the south, where they received exten-

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sive examinations for the following three months.

In view of the generally negative findings on the
Amcrican servicemen, they were later returned to
their duty stations. The Utirik people were also
allowed to return to their home island, where
radioactive contamination was slight enough to
allow safe habitation. Because Rongelap Atoll was
considered to be too highly contaminated, a tem-

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MAIUROSS

Figure |. Map of tallout area (March 1, 1954), Mar-

shall Islands.

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